3914. Robert Southey to John Rickman, 3 November 1822

 

Endorsement: RS to JR 3 Nov/ 1822
MS: Huntington Library, RS 426. ALS; 2p.
Previously published: John Wood Warter (ed.), Selections from the Letters of Robert Southey, 4 vols (London, 1856), III, pp. 343–344.


My dear R

My mornings for the last three weeks have been pretty closely employed upon Frere’s papers which will occupy a fortnight yet before I shall have got thro them.

(1)

Southey was studying these papers for his History of the Peninsular War (1823–1832).

They gave me all the information of which I was in want for that stage of the war in which my materials were most defective.

Poor Giffords life is so precarious at this time, & the probability of his being unable to conduct the QR. even if he recovers, so great, that the question of succession becomes one of some interest to me. I wish John Coleridge to be the Editor, being a man who unites in himself all the requisites, & with whom I could act cordially. Unless I am very much mistaken, the character of the Journal would be raised, & its influence greatly increased, by the firm & consistent language which it would hold under his management, & the utter exclusion of such splenetic effusions as often disgrace it now.

“The Liberal,” is quite what it ought to be.

(2)

Byron’s The Vision of Judgment (1822), a parody of Southey’s A Vision of Judgement (1821), was published by John Hunt (1775–1848; DNB), brother of Leigh Hunt, in The Liberal, 1 (October 1822), 3–39. There were only four issues of The Liberal.

If I hated Lord Byron as deeply as he does me, I could not wish it to be worse. It cannot, I think, reach a third number, even if it proceeds to a second, & escapes prosecution. They must be thorough-paced Whigs indeed for whom it is not too bad, – & moreover his Lordship & Leigh Hunt will quarrel ere long & break up the infernal firm.

We are going on well thank God. Since my brother left me I have settled regularly to my winter occupations, & as regularly taken the daily exercise which he prescribed. A summers mountaineering has been of the greatest benefit to me, & I hope to keep in the same good condition, till you see me early in the spring.

Remember us most kindly to Mrs R.

God bless you
RS.

Notes

1. Southey was studying these papers for his History of the Peninsular War (1823–1832).[back]
2. Byron’s The Vision of Judgment (1822), a parody of Southey’s A Vision of Judgement (1821), was published by John Hunt (1775–1848; DNB), brother of Leigh Hunt, in The Liberal, 1 (October 1822), 3–39. There were only four issues of The Liberal.[back]
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